Nandita Das, Celina Jaitly, Apurva Asrani and other Bollywood stars support LGBTQ community

Several Bollywood stars have lent their support to the LGBTQ community.

Film celebrities like Onir, Celina Jaitly, Nandita Das and Apurva Asrani want the “archaic” Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code to be repealed, and the LGBT community given justice and inclusion. The LGBTQI (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and intersex) community has been facing questions for long, battling for their rights, and they are determined to go on till they become India’s pride. According to petitioners challenging Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, the law which criminalises any sort of homosexual activity, is not only archaic and unreasonable but a “hangover of post-colonial guilt”.

On Thursday, the Supreme Court said that all the discrimination against the LGBT community will be gone once Section 377 is declared unconstitutional.

Bollywood personalities speak out against Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code.

Here’s what the celebrities said:

Celina Jaitly

Celina Jaitly speaks out against Section 377 that targets the LGBTQ community

Justice to the LGBTQI of India is long overdue. In India, we have an archaic relic of a law, Section 377, which has put the entire Indian LGBT community in direct line of fire. This law can be and is being used to blackmail, violate, abuse the people of the LGBT community on a daily basis in workplaces, in day-to-day lives and majorly hinders the work of health workers in the field of HIV/Aids.

Laws are meant and made to protect us, not to form a platform for fanatics to blackmail, abuse, traumatise, violate and humiliate millions of LGBTQI of this country. In India, that is what 377 is unfortunately perpetrating. When these same abuses are perpetrated against members of any other group of people, states rightly push hard for a more vigorous response. However, when it comes to the LGBT community, why should the resolve not be the same?

People are harassed for their orientation on a daily basis, but you would not know it unless you were the victim or a close friend/relative of one. The entire community has been ostracised due to an archaic law and modern-day collapse of an ability to evolve and grow and embrace equality and right to life.

The fact is that only the law/legal system can break centuries of social stigma and religious ostracism (just like ‘sati’ had to be abolished). In India, Section 377 provides a legal platform to segregate the entire LGBTQI from the rest of the bonafide citizens.

The laws of the world’s largest democracy must ensure that no one should be left out or excluded when it comes to basic human rights. There is no subset of rights or new category of rights called ‘LGBT rights’. LGBT people are entitled to the same rights as everyone else. Until each and every Indian is not given their basic human life with dignity, India cannot claim to be truly free.

Nandita Das

Nandita Das speaks out on Section 377

When will we grow up as a society and embrace reality with compassion and understanding and not with prejudice and judgement? The archaic law that criminalises homosexuality is shameful. The impending decriminalisation of homosexuality by repealing Section 377 is imperative. It is long overdue. In times when we should be fighting hate — stopping lynchings, abuse and discrimination against absolutely anyone — it is shocking that some want to stop people from loving. Freedom to live and love with dignity ought to be for all.”

Onir

Onir talks about the LGBT community

Long overdue… Though it would have been so much better if the government had supported the petition. But the fact that the government is not opposing it, is heartening. I am hopeful that the Supreme Court will do the right thing and make this nation a truly democratic nation which upholds the constitutional rights of all citizens irrespective of sexual preferences of consenting adults. This would be a step forward towards further ensuring the civil rights of the community. Much respect for all those who have been for years tirelessly working for this.

Apurva Asrani

Apurva Asrani on Section 377

It is about time India left the company of countries like Iran, Iraq and Afghanistan that criminalises same-sex relations and joined the ranks of developed nations such as the US, UK and Australia that value human rights. A sizeable number of Indian citizens belonging to the LGBTQ community deserve a life of dignity and respect, just like everyone else.

After the travesty of justice in the Supreme Court’s 2013 hearing, where homosexuality was re-criminalised, many of us felt letdown. But it also had a galvanising effect. The highest court called the LGBTQ a ‘minuscule minority’ while stripping it of any deserved recognition. That’s when many of us decided to come out publicly and show the country that we are anything but a negligible minority.

I have a good feeling that we will win this case. And I hope more people from the film industry will then find the courage to come out and empower the people who look up to them.